So after a fairly heavy storyline in which Robo wakes up from his detour to the late nineteenth century to discover that the world in under the control of a US Government conspiracy started to oppose him, specifically,
and being attacked by kaiju, the latest issue of the
Atomic Robo webcomic is delving into the past for some wacky espionage shenanigans in 1938 China.
To be more precise, Robo visits the Japanese-occupied city of Shanghai, where he makes contact with a rather familiar-looking member of the resistance forces. It is, of course,
Short Round, first seen rescuing Indiana Jones from gangsters in the opening of
Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom - the New York Giants hat is a dead giveaway. It only makes sense, after all, that even if he ended up spending some time acting as Indy's sidekick elsewhere in the world (he does pop up in this capacity from time to time in the Indiana Jones Expanded Universe, most notably in the sadly non-canonical
Into the Great Unknown), he would return to his native Shanghai to help repel the invading Japanese. This would also explain what Short Round was doing while Indy was hunting for the Holy Grail in
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, which also takes place in 1938.
And lest the reader think that the hat is a coincidence - it's not impossible that two such hats were floating around in Shanghai even in the 1930s - there's the little matter of the place Robo gets sent for the next meeting:
|
No, Robo, there is not. |
While it's not quite the venerable
Club Obi Wan (and yes, folks, that's a
Star Wars joke), it might possibly be the same building, and it's almost certainly named after Willie Scott's
memorable last performance before she got dragged into Short Round and Indy's escape. Perhaps Lao Che was in a nostalgic mood when he was doing the remodeling. We may yet find out, as Robo has yet to do more than walk in the front door of the club. Might Lao Che himself be waiting inside? It wouldn't be very much out of character for the writers of the comic - the last issue, after all, was very much a homage to
Pacific Rim, while the one prior to that ended with
cameo appearances from Agents West and Gordon from
The Wild, Wild, West. And the name of this storyline, as it turns out, is
The Temple of Od . . .